This vintage-looking circus tent evokes a feeling of nostalgia and memories in the making. (Image courtesy of Vecteezy.com)

August 2024

Cover Story

Fun Under The Big Top

Circus collectibles reflect colorful history, memories

by Corbin Crable

Revelers young and old have been reliving the thrill of the circus finally coming to town by collecting circus memorabilia – and the hobby continues to be on the rise, even if circuses themselves seem like a thing of the past.

“Collecting circus items remains a vibrant and colorful hobby, especially paper products—photographs, posters, literature, business records—and artifacts,” according to a 2022 article by Ingrid Floyd on antiquetrader.com. “The grandiosity of the Big Top, with its music and artistry, resonates still in the heart of every collector.”

Organizations such as the Circus Historical Society (www.circushistory.org) seek to preserve items from the heyday of the circus, which is older than one might think. The first circus took place in 1793 in Philadelphia, with the practice of the performances being housed in a large tent added around 1825. Famed businessman P.T. Barnum joined the scene in 1871, and his partnership with the five Ringling brothers would eventually make the Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus a household name, synonymous with circuses.

The Ringling Bros

The Ringling Bros.

The Ringling Bros. merged with the late P.T. Barnum’s traveling circus in 1919, forming the world-famous Ringling Bros. and Barnum & Bailey Circus. (Image courtesy of Circusauctions.com)

Collectibles tell tales of the trends and personalities in the industry. For instance, Lloyd writes in Kovels Antique Trader’s blog, a famous clown in the 20th century, Jack LeClair, who drew up schematics for a prototype of a fat suit he would wear in his act. “If a collector obtains the ‘fat suit,’ a photograph of the clown wearing it, and LeClair’s schematic, that’s ‘auction magic,’” Lloyd writes, quoting a Florida auctioneer, Brian Hollifield.

Also expensive but relatively more affordable, of course, are the posters and other ephemera advertising circuses coming to town. These will always increase in value, Berry says, due to the very nature of ephemera itself – items made of paper that aren’t meant to be saved, but instead discarded.

Barnum, known for his innovative marketing just as much as his “Greatest Show on Earth,” would employ teams of people to plaster up the posters in any town within a half hour of the venue where the circus was to take place.

“But these colorful, vibrant posters slapped on barns, sheds and shop windows were only expected to survive a couple of weeks,” Lloyd writes.

cast-iron mechanical bank

Cast-iron mechanical bank

This cast-iron mechanical bank is available at 1st Dibs’ website for $595. It was made in the early 1900s. (Image courtesy of 1st Dibs)

Those posters that did survive after the circus left town have gone on to become quite valuable, and according to Antique Trader, posters from the 1930s and ‘40s are especially attractive, vibrant, and colorful – but beware of reproductions, of which there are many. Most of today’s reproductions of classic circus posters were made in the 1960s, “and in the 1970s, the Ringling Bros. sold reproductions at performances,” Lloyd says.

Those who collect circus posters should consider the item’s dimensions when looking for an original, according to Berry.
“An authentic poster measures 42 inches long by 28 inches wide for a one sheet or has dimensions of multiples or fractions of that,” he says in Lloyd’s article.

Lloyd goes on: “Check if a poster has a “P” letter in its margin followed by a stock number. An authentic circus poster does not. Lastly, using a jeweler’s loupe, examine the poster. A reproduction will have pixelation.”

Circus show’s animals

Circus show’s animals on posters

Many of Ringling Bros. and Barnum and Bailey Circus’ posters focused heavily on the show’s animals, with its elephants advertised as the centerpiece of the program. (Image courtesy of Chris Berry and Kovels Antique Trader)

tin trapeze toys

Tin trapeze toys

A pair of tin trapeze toys from the 1950s. (Image courtesy of Live Auctioneers)

adventures in Europe is this Air France poster

Juggling circus clown figurine

A Tiffany & Co. sterling silver and enamel figurine of a juggling circus clown figurine. (Image courtesy of Heritage Auctions)

Although the Ringling Bros. circus made a return in 2023 after a six-year hiatus, circus enthusiasts can get a more complete look at the industry and its history at Circus World, located in Baraboo, Wisconsin. Opened in 1959 and with seven buildings in its complex listed on the National Historic Landmark roster, Circus World offers not only daily circus performances, but also music revues, exhibits, and a massive collection of historical circus memorabilia (the site was home to the original Ringling Bros. Circus from 1884-1918, shortly before its merger with Barnum’s circus). Currently, Circus World is maintained by the Wisconsin Historical Society.

Besides boasting a massive collection of more than 9,000 historical circus posters, Circus World also possesses nearly 300 colorful circus wagons from across the United States and Europe. It’s the single largest collection in the world, according to the attraction’s website, www.circusworld.com. And if you can’t make the trek up north to Wisconsin, you can always visit www.circus-collectibles.com, a site displaying the sizable collection of Jovan Andric, a collector from Serbia whose collection includes posters, programs, flyers, tickets, and other ephemera from circuses all over the world (though Andric says he likes to focus on the circus culture of Italy, since they visited his country the most often).

circus-themed animal crackers

Circus-themed animal crackers

Kids today still enjoy these classic circus-themed animal crackers, a popular treat since 1902. (Image courtesy
of Amazon)

Animal crackers

“My passion for circus culture and circus advertisement has been a part of my life since early childhood,” Andric writes on the website. “It was in the mid-1970s when I became fascinated with the colorful visuals of magically drawn animals, clowns and performers covering city walls and store windows. Around the age of 4, I remember noticing posters on street light posts and observing every detail on them.”

If such coveted original items aren’t exactly in your budget, more affordable circus collectibles can be found everywhere online. Original games, photos and postcards, coin banks, cast-iron and tin toys, and even vintage popcorn and peanut bags can be found on sites like 1stdibs.com and gameroomshow.com.

“The Projectile Woman.” Spanish poster

“The Projectile Woman”

A vintage Spanish-language poster advertises “The Projectile Woman.” (Image courtesy of Live Auctioneers)

early 20th century wooden circus lion

Early 20th century wooden circus lion

This early 20th century wooden circus lion toy from the Schoenhut Toy Co.’s Humpty Dumpty Toy Circus recently sold for $475. (Image courtesy of 1st Dibs)

Some of the smallest collectibles include metal figurines that you might find in the 1930s and ‘40s in a digger machine, the precursor to today’s claw machine games. They were usually around 4 inches tall. Even the miniatures in good condition are very affordable on gameshowroom.com at only $22 apiece.

“These metal prizes were used in early penny arcades to attract players to play the claw machine,” the product description on the website states. “The operator would wrap a one dollar bill around the metal prize. The lucky person would insert coin in digger machine to attempt to win one of these rare prizes.”

If you don’t want to merely buy an item and instead hunger for the thrill of the hunt, Freedom Auction Co. (circusauctions.com) hosts regular circus memorabilia auctions. In addition to posters, ephemera, props, and photographs and films, the company also has auctioned off banners, railroadiana, elephant headdresses, trunks, bull-hooks, oddities, wagon wheels, and even clown shoes.
As always, circus collectibles remain a booming business thanks in large part to the nostalgia of circusgoers seeking to relive childhood memories.

“To this day,” writes Victoria Moore in The Journal of Antiques and Collectibles, “whenever I see a performance on t.v., I can still hear calliope music, smell popcorn and peanuts, and get excited by the ringmaster.”